[PovertyRaceWomen 1448] Re: drop-outs
Andrea Wilder
andreawilder at comcast.net
Mon Nov 26 13:05:44 EST 2007
Hi Cynthia,
I read all your reports. I worked for the principal of a Boston Middle
School for 3 years, and I recognize what you say. I felt I couldn't
speak out about education unless I had had this experience in Boston,
so this is what I did. The first school goal is crowd control.
The problems are enormous. I don't know if things changed under
Payzant.
If those of you reading this want another view of what is possible,
google Boston.Com, then "Town-gown Triumph" and find an article about
how Clark University works with kids. Now, this article is written
from the outside, but there is still a lot about the inside. What do
you think?
By the way, I cannot imagine a harder job, physically and emotionally,
than school teaching. The teacher is "on" for 24/7 for 9 or 10 days a
year. My guess is that the teachers you talked with were totally
fried.
Andrea
On Nov 26, 2007, at 11:47 AM, Cynthia Peters wrote:
> My daughter did not finish 9th grade. I suppose you could say she
> dropped out. But we felt she made a positive choice. I wrote a 3-part
> series about it on www.zmag.org (links below). We are a privileged
> family and so our context for this choice is different from most.
> Still, I believe there are lessons. - Cynthia
>
> Part 1:
> http://www.zmag.org/Sustainers/Content/2006-12/12peters.cfm
> Part 2:
> http://www.zmag.org/Sustainers/Content/2007-02/09peters.cfm
> Part 3:
> http://www.zmag.org/Sustainers/Content/2007-03/22peters.cfm
>
> --
> --
>
> Cynthia Peters
> Change Agent Editor
> World Education
> 44 Farnsworth Street
> Boston, MA 02210
>
> tel: 617-482-9485
> fax: 617-482-0617
> email: cpeters at worlded.org
>
> Check out The Change Agent online at:
> www.nelrc.org/changeagent
>
>
>>>> On 11/26/2007 at 10:19 AM, in message
> <a8e5ecbb47838dacdbd6942ed2ea939d at comcast.net>, Andrea Wilder
> <andreawilder at comcast.net> wrote:
>> Hi Andre, Daphne,
>>
>> When school kids are taught in their home language, not the school
>> language, then I would say that they are being denied knowledge of
>> the
>> mainstream language. Some would not like me saying this, doubtless,
>> but it is the way I do see it, after having listened to and read many
>> opinions.
>>
>> Suppose those pregnant teenagers came to school, were educated
>> together, and learned how to work with their children within a school
>> setting? Other places do this, why not every place?
>>
>> I read in newspapers small vignettes of schools that work for poor
>> kids--they do the things for the children that parents who have more
>> money do for their own children, automatically. The corders of
>> schools
>> have to be elastic, including in their working day these additional
>> tasks.
>>
>> Small schools that have succeeded: 1) they are small and their
>> classes
>> are small, 2) the teachers are knowledgeable in their subject areas.
>> 3)
>> teachers check in with family members frequently, keeping strong ties
>> between students , parents, and school, 4 ) teachers assume that
>> children can learn, 5) there is discipline and rules and expectations
>> about behavior.
>>
>> When you start with small children there is not a disposition that is
>> anti-school--you're starting with day care and what used to be called
>> "nursery school."
>>
>> Are there people on this list serv who have managed, created, or
>> worked
>> in schools with this model? And that enroll teenage mothers as part
>> of
>> a normal high school experience?
>>
>> Andrea
>>
>> On Nov 26, 2007, at 8:12 AM, Muro, Andres wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Daphne:
>>>
>>> Actually, this was one of the things that Allan Quigley focused on.
>>> He
>>> did studies and found that many k-12 students have a poor disposition
>>> towards traditional learning environments. He called them resistors.
>>> these are the students that end up dropping out. When they come to
>>> ABE
>>> contexts, they still have a poor disposition towards those
>>> environments that tend to repeat the same format as the k-12 system.
>>>
>>> Ogbu also studied resistance of "involuntary minorities" towards
>>> traditional learning environments. he argued that "Involuntary
>>> minorities", or those that have a lower social status in a
>>> society (in California Chicanos and blacks) are forced by schools
>>> to adopt that cultural patterns of the hegemonic group. If they do
>>> they will succeed in school but they will betray their own. So,
>>> minorities are caught between acting "whitie" and succeeding in
>>> school, but being rejected but their own peers, or continue to belong
>>> among their peers and failing in school.
>>>
>>> Jim Cummins suggested additive educational models, where students
>>> continued to learn cultural and linguistic practices of their peers
>>> as
>>> well as the hegemonic practices. In Oakland, it was proposed that
>>> kids
>>> learn the African American Language System along with standard
>>> English, but many were offended by that. In many kinders and
>>> elementary charter schools in California they are teaching Spanish,
>>> along with Mexican history, culture, etc. many of those school have
>>> received bomb threats, insults, etc. In fact, there is a radio show
>>> that has targeted those schools and spews all kinds of racist talk.
>>>
>>> There is a charter school that I believe that is called "Semillas del
>>> Corazon". It is in a poor mostly Latin neighborhood. I think that you
>>> can find it on youtube. they have recordings of the threats that they
>>> get, and they've had to close.
>>>
>>> Andres
>>>
>>> From: povertyracewomen-bounces at nifl.gov on behalf of Daphne Greenberg
>>> Sent: Sun 11/25/2007 6:52 PM
>>> To: povertyracewomen at nifl.gov
>>> Subject: [PovertyRaceWomen 1439] drop-outs
>>>
>>>
>>> Andrea raises an important point-" we should interview the drop-outs
>>> to see why they have dropped out." Does anyone know of studies which
>>> were conducted with high school drop outs, asking them why they
>>> dropped out of school? Perhaps some of you have asked your learners
>>> this question and want to contribute what you have learned. What I
>>> have heard are issues related to gangs, pregnancy, illness, moving
>>> around a lot. I have never heard anyone specifically state anything
>>> about the educational system, even though most of the learners that I
>>> have interacted with read below a fifth grade level, and therefore
>>> did
>>> not benefit from the school system way before they dropped out. It
>>> would be interesting if anyone knows of any studies that focus on
>>> this
>>> type of issue.
>>> Daphne
>>>
>>>>>> Andrea Wilder <andreawilder at comcast.net> 11/25/07 8:43 PM >>>
>>> Hi Liz,
>>>
>>> It is late (for me) Sunday, so I will just say that we should
>>> interview
>>> the drop-outs to see why they have dropped out. Also--kids know
>>> school
>>> is important,, it is a cultural norm; often pleasing the parents is
>>> in
>>> there too. No one wants to fail.
>>>
>>> Andrea
>>>
>>> On Nov 25, 2007, at 6:29 PM, Liz Hawkins wrote:
>>>
>>>> I think one of the problems with public education is that we often
>>>> assume kids are fundamentally different from adults. We assume that
>>>> kids should and will go to school and try to succeed because they
>>>> are
>>>> required to do so and need to do so in order to get along in life;
>>>> whereas adults presumably seek out education by choice. However,
>>>> making education compulsory for kids does not change the fact that
>>>> students (of any age) will choose what they want to learn and how
>>> hard
>>>> they will work to learn it based on a variety of factors.
>>>>
>>>> Andre brought up the cultural/social issues that exist, and I
>>>> certainly agree. Students who see school as a place which offends
>>> and
>>>> threatens their cultural ideals will struggle there. When I taught
>>> in
>>>> the public school system in S. Atlanta, I frequently had high school
>>>> students (or even younger) who really needed to work (not in the
>>>> future, but right then) in order to help support their families.
>>>> Although I tried to be sensitive to these students' needs, I found
>>>> myself insisting that education should be a priority, and in doing
>>>> so
>>>> without offering them any real solutions to their present dilemmas,
>>>> alienating them. At school, they are told they must succeed in
>>> school
>>>> in order to have a hope for a better, more economically comfortable
>>>> life, but that does not make sense to a child who knows she might
>>>> not
>>>> get to eat this weekend, that her little brother may not have shoes
>>> to
>>>> wear this winter, or that her own baby will have no one to look
>>>> after
>>>> it if she goes to school every day and does all her homework instead
>>>> of finding ways to make money. Certainly these situations are not
>>>> fair, but they are real, and if we want to improve education, we
>>>> need
>>>> to address these problems in the community as well.
>>>>
>>>> Dana mentioned the focus on testing as a fundamental problem in
>>> school
>>>> systems, and this too is absolutely true, but the testing issue is
>>>> representative of the same underlying issue--students fail to see a
>>>> lack of relevance between what they are being told to learn and what
>>>> they need to survive. They do not understand (and neither do many
>>>> teachers) why being able to pass a standardized test is important,
>>> and
>>>> yet being able to pass the test is the primary incentive they are
>>>> presented with as motivation to learn the material. Having taught
>>> 9th
>>>> and 10th graders, I know that there are many teachers who strive to
>>>> make these connections and show their students how getting an
>>>> education is truly, really, immediately and in the long-term,
>>>> beneficial. I was one of them, but honestly, more often than not I
>>>> had a hard time seeing the relevance myself.
>>>>
>>>> So the issue remains that public school at present is not relevant
>>>> to
>>>> everyone. I think that technical education programs,
>>> accelerated/dual
>>>> enrollment programs, and magnet schools are all steps in the right
>>>> direction toward making sure there are different types of education
>>>> available to meet different people's needs, but we need to do more.
>>>> If we can figure out what people really need and try to give it to
>>>> them, perhaps parents and communities will again rally behind the
>>>> educational system, providing local support and encouraging
>>>> political
>>>> changes at the state and national levels as well. Rather than
>>>> continuing to treat the symptoms of a poor educational system by
>>>> prescribing medications (such as No Child Left Behind), many of
>>>> which
>>>> themselves have heinous side effects, we need to pull out the
>>>> scalpel
>>>> and operate on the core issues.
>>>>
>>>> -Liz
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Dana Donohue <dana.donohue at gmail.com> wrote:Hi Andre and Andrea.
>>>>> Although I have never been a school teacher, I currently work on a
>>>>> reading research project in several elementary schools in Atlanta.
>>>>> I
>>>>> was curious about your statement, Andrea, that we still need to
>>>>> come
>>>>> to an agreement about what the problems in the schools are. Excuse
>>> my
>>>>> naivety, but is there still no consensus? Here are some of the
>>>>> major
>>>>> problems that I have seen and have discussed with teachers. First
>>>>> (and probably foremost), the focus on testing creates a lot of
>>>>> apprehension and fear that if they (the classes and/or schools)
>>>>> perform poorly, more of their funding will be taken away. Second,
>>>>> there appears to be a lot of variability in the skills and
>>>>> expertise
>>>>> between both schools and teachers. I'm guessing that this, too, may
>>>>> stem from the funding issue. Lastly, I think that especially in the
>>>>> poorer areas, there lacks that important bond between the schools
>>> and
>>>>> the parents. These bonds may encourage children to stay engaged in
>>>>> the learning process. I suppose that a good place to start to fix
>>>>> these problems would be a push by educators to overhaul or do away
>>>>> with No Child Left Behind. Of course, I'm not a teacher and so I am
>>>>> curious about what teachers think about how to fix the myriad of
>>>>> issues that hinder children's education.
>>>>>
>>>>> Dana
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On 11/24/07, Andrea Wilder <andreawilder at comcast.net> wrote:
>>>>> Andre--
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I understand what you are saying. I wrote what I did because I
>>> think
>>>>>> there is enough experience and brain power on this list serv and
>>>>>> others
>>>>>> to light up a good-sized city. Where I live, school boards get
>>>>>> elected. They are supposed to be the link between the school and
>>> us,
>>>>>> and they are answerable to us--us meaning the people who elected
>>>>>> them.
>>>>>> Here, the "us" are the extremely knowledgeable members of this
>>>>>> list
>>>>>> serv. We know the consequences of school failure. This is useful
>>>>>> knowledge, not only for the dropouts, but what may be behind the
>>> drop
>>>>>> outs. I am convinced that groups of people with this knowledge,
>>>>>> in
>>>>>> our
>>>>>> communities, can make a difference. I used to be a school
>>> teacher,
>>>>>> too. We first must come to some agreements as to what the
>>>>>> problems
>>>>>> are, then prioritize and find out where to start.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Andrea
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Nov 24, 2007, at 12:25 PM, Andre Whitmore wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Andrea
>>>>>>> I am a former school teacher and I believe that the school system
>>>>>>> in and of itself is the reason why so many students fail. The
>>>>>>> schooling process is designed to ensure that students are
>>>>>> socialized
>>>>>>> to acquire an American cultural identity, which for many of the
>>>>>>> students is an unrealistic goal for them. It has become
>>> increasing
>>>>>>> difficult for students to envisionhow they can actively
>>> participate
>>>>>>> and succeed in this culture. Jobs, occupations, and success are
>>> no
>>>>>>> longer consistent with education. The educational requirements
>>> have
>>>>>>> become too demanding and do not offer any guarantee for a job.
>>> Many
>>>>>>> minority students have observed how their family members and
>>>>>> people in
>>>>>>> the community have sought education that leads to poverty still.
>>>>>> The
>>>>>>> schooling process should offer students the opportunity ability
>>> to
>>>>>>> become socialized in their culture so that they can associate
>>> real
>>>>>>> significance to their education. furthermore, American culture
>>>>>>> singifies free market and free enterprise opportunities, but the
>>>>>>> schooling process does not place emphasis on this aspect. Most
>>>>>> public
>>>>>>> schools teach students to become apoorly trained labor force that
>>>>>>> remains dependent on the corporate structure. Simply put,
>>> students
>>>>>>> will continue to resist public education until education in this
>>>>>>> country receives a make-over.
>>>>>>> Andre
>>>>>>> ----- Original Message ----
>>>>>>> From: Andrea Wilder < andreawilder at comcast.net>
>>>>>>> To: Women and Literacy Discussion List The Poverty Race
>>>>>>> <povertyracewomen at nifl.gov>
>>>>>>> Sent: Friday, November 23, 2007 10:29:06 PM
>>>>>>> Subject: [PovertyRaceWomen 1429] Changing schools
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Hi everyone,
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I think it is really important to find out which types of
>>> students
>>>>>> in
>>>>>>> our local schools aren't doing well and to change local school
>>>>>> behavior
>>>>>>> so all students can succeed.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Andrea
>>>>>>>
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